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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 1315
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## Nonhlanhla v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (2014/11875)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1315 (8 November 2023)
Nonhlanhla v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (2014/11875)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1315 (8 November 2023)
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sino date 8 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: 2014/11875
In
the matter between:
MASUKU
NONHLANHLA
Plaintiff
And
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Defendant
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the caselines digital
data base of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of
South Africa,
Johannesburg, and by email to the attorneys of record of the parties.
The deemed date and time of the delivery is
10H00 on 8 November 2023
JUDGMENT
Sutherland
DJP:
Introduction
[1] The plaintiff
is a former employee of the defendant. She was dismissed. She sued
the defendant on an alleged breach of
the terms of her employment
agreement. Also, she sued the defendant for injuria in consequence of
an alleged unlawful dismissal,
but that claim, I am told from the bar
by both counsel, is not being persisted with. The defendant, inter
alia, has pleaded that
the High Court has no jurisdiction to hear the
plaintiffs claim.
[2] By agreement of
the parties a rule 33(4) order was made thus:
(1) The claim
arising from the alleged breach by the defendant of the employment
contract between the plaintiff and the defendant
shall be dealt with
thus:
(i) The question of
whether or not the High court has jurisdiction to hear the claim of
the plaintiff shall be separated and
decided.
(ii) All other
issues are deferred.
(2) If the judgment
is that the High Court has not got jurisdiction, the plaintiffs claim
shall be dismissed.
(3) If the judgment
is that the high court has jurisdiction, the trial shall proceed.
[3] Accordingly, I
heard argument on this question.
The jurisdictional
issue
[3] The controversy
is located in the jurisprudence that reserves certain types of claims
for the fora created by the Labour
Relations Act 61 of 1995 (LRA) and
which, in other respects, allows for concurrent jurisdiction between
the Labour Court and the
High court in certain labour matters. It is
trite that an employee who is able to allege a cause of action that
constitutes a breach
of an individual contract of employment may
bring such a case to either the High Court or, in terms of section
77(3) of the Basic
Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA) directly to
the Labour court, and need not pursue a statutory remedy through
conciliation and
arbitration in the Commission for Conciliation
Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA).
[4] However, the
jurisdiction of either court is not automatically engaged by a simple
allegation that the plaintiff sues
on a contact of employment.
Rather, the
breach
which is alleged to have occurred must indeed constitute a breach of
the terms of the contract and the allegations of fact in the
particulars of claim must set out such a case. In this case that
distinction has been overlooked.
[1]
[5] What is the
plaintiffs cause of action? In her pleadings, it is averred thus: -
‘
(16) It was an
implied
[2]
term of the
plaintiffs’ contract of employment with the defendant that both
parties would treat each other lawfully in all
matters dealing with
their relationship.
(17) It was also within
this contemplation that organised labour to which the plaintiff is a
member and the defendant to enter into
a collective agreement in
terms whereof their relationship would be regulated and that neither
part shall conduct themselves in
contravention of the provisions
thereof. Find attached a copy of the collective agreement, annex NM7.
(18) The defendant has
failed to act in accordance with the provisions of the collective
agreement in particular clause 7.7 in that
it altered the findings
and determinations of the initial presiding officer, which
determination was final and binding on both
parties to the collective
agreement.
(19) the defendant
instituting the alteration hearing and instituted the new
disciplinary proceedings against the plaintiff for
the same
misconduct despite the fact that the previous disciplinary hearing
ruled in her favour and handed down a sanction as per
annex NM 3. The
defendant has unreasonably and without just cause subjected the
plaintiff to double jeopardy and its termination
of the plaintiff’s
contract of employment is unlawful.’
[6] It is plain
that the right invoked is one located in the collective agreement. It
must at this juncture be remarked that
the collective agreement is
between the trade union and the defendant employer. The plaintiff is
not a party to that agreement,
nor does she aver so.
[7] More
importantly, it is not averred that the collective agreement was
incorporated into her contract of employment.
This
per
se is a critical flaw in her case.
[8] The plaintiff’s
written contract of employment is constituted by a letter of
appointment dated 29 June 2011. This
document set out the usual banal
details of her position as a cashier. It notably does not incorporate
the collective agreement.
Nor is the minimal text capable of being
interpreted to do so.
[9] The source of
Right
the plaintiff claims have been violated is, as alleged,
in clause 7.7 of the collective agreement. This is a clause in a part
of
that agreement which is headed ‘conduct of a disciplinary
hearing.’ The clause 7.7 indeed does forbid an alteration
of a determination by the ‘municipal manager or other governing
structure of a municipality’. Whether or not the defendant
actually breached this clause, for the purposes of this judgment, is
beside the point; i.e. is this a
Right
that can be invoked by
invoking the contract of employment. Plainly, it cannot.
[10] The
Defendant’s plea, paragraph 14 avers this defence. Further, the
plea avers that the collective agreement provides
for a procedure
leading to conciliation and arbitration in the South African Local
Government Bargaining Council (SALGBC). This
is standard procedure
for collective agreements, which like this one, was concluded under
the auspices of the SALGBC. The claim
is manifestly a labour law
case. To rely on this
causa,
the plaintiff ought to have
referred a dispute about an unfair dismissal to the SALGBC.
[11] It is obvious
that the High Court has no jurisdiction. The action must therefore be
dismissed.
[12] As to costs,
paradoxically, having repudiated an opportunity to refer a claim of
unfair dismissal to the SALGBC, I was
told from the bar that the
South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU) was the funder of the
case on behalf of the plaintiff
and owing to the ongoing relationship
between that union and the defendant, there should not be, in line
with conventions in labour
litigation, a costs order against the
plaintiff. That is not the norm in civil litigation. No reason
exists why costs ought
not to follow the result.
The
Order
(1)
The action is dismissed with costs.
Roland Sutherland
Deputy Judge
President, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
Heard:
30 October 2023
Delivered:
8 November 2023
For
the Plaintiff: Attorney P F Ndou, (with rights of appearance)
Of
Ndou Attorneys.
For
the Defendant: Adv T Ntoane
Instructed
by Tshibi Zebedela Inc.
[1]
I was referred to several cases by the plaintiff. These cases do not
support the plaintiffs case. In
Ngubani
v National Youth Development Agency (2014) 35 ILJ 1356 (LC)
the
plaintiff sued on an employment contract which did include a clause
stipulating that a fair disciplinary enquiry was necessary.
In
Somi
v Old Mutual Africa Holdings (Pty) Ltd (2015) 36 ILJ 2370 (LC)
the provisions of the LRA were incorporated into the contract of
employment. In
Wereley
v Productivity SA & Another (2020) 41 ILJ 997 (LC)
a clause in the contract of employment incorporated the employers
‘rules regulations and procedures’ which the court
held
included a fair disciplinary procedure. All these cases are examples
where there was, as a fact, an incorporation of a right
to
fairness,, which in the case of this plaintiff is absent. In
addition, I was referred to
Ekurheleni
Metropolitan Municipality v SA Municipal workers Union & others
(2018) 39 ILJ 546 (LAC)
where the distinction between a contractual claim and a claim based
on a statutory right was explained. That case takes the debate
no
further. Also, I was referred to
United
National Transport Union v Transnet SOC ZALCJHB 2022/
127
where a union lodged a claim based on an agreement to increase
wages. On exception, the court held that the allegation passed
the
test for excipibility (see para [9]) and dismissed the exception.
This case is not authority for the finding that a contractual
term
actually existed nor was the case argued for substantive relief.
[2]
I read the term ‘implied’ to mean ‘tacit’
The term ‘implied’ should be reserved for the
naturalia
of a
contract.
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